30 dead as Daesh attacks city in east Syria: monitor

Beirut: Daesh (Islamic State) launched a ferocious assault Saturday on a city in eastern Syria, leaving more than 30 militants and regime fighters dead, a monitoring group said.

At least 12 members of government forces and 20 Daesh militants were among the dead in the attack on regime positions in Deir Ezzor, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Both the Observatory and Syrian state news agency SANA said two civilians were also killed in Daesh rocket fire on government-controlled zones in the city.

Around 200,000 people live in Deir Ezzor city, which has been besieged by Daesh since early 2015 and is the capital of the oil-rich province of the same name.

Daesh has sought to overrun the entire city, including the key nearby military airport.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said Saturday´s attack was the "most violent" assault mounted by Daesh on the city in more than a year.

He said the group was using tunnel bombs and suicide attackers, while Syrian and allied warplanes battered militant positions with air strikes.

"Daesh is amassing its forces to attack Deir Ezzor and breach government lines," a Syrian military source told AFP.

He said militants had aimed to cut the route between the airport and the city, but that the government´s counter-attack had stopped them.

"Warplanes attacked Daesh´s supply lines in all the battlefronts and around the airport," he said.

The militant group is excluded from a nationwide truce that was brokered by Turkey and Russia and came into effect on December 30.

Diplomatic efforts to end Syria´s nearly six-year war have thus far failed, but Moscow and Ankara are hoping that peace talks in the Kazakh capital of Astana later this month will lead to a political solution.